Corporate Crisis Management Preparing for a Rapid Response to Unexpected Events

Transcription

Corporate Crisis Management Preparing for a Rapid Response to Unexpected Events
Corporate Crisis Management
Preparing for a Rapid Response to
Unexpected Events
“It takes 20 years to build a
reputation and five minutes to
ruin it. If you think about that,
you’ll do things differently.”
Warren Buffett
Catastrophe, crisis and unexpected
events are part of the business
landscape. A quick look at the last
ten years demonstrates the broad
range, unexpected nature and
sometimes devastating impact of
catastrophic events on businesses,
their shareholders, their customers,
and the communities they serve.
Large scale crises, whether stemming
from catastrophic events, managerial
misconduct or other causes, always
tend to have a significant effect on
earnings and share prices. Companies
may or may not recover from such
situations. Some companies come back
stronger than ever, but some companies
affected by crisis have disappeared
altogether, either through liquidation or
merger, and some have suffered from
lingering reputational damage.
In the past few years, we have seen
an intensification and acceleration
of crisis events, which is closely
related to an increasingly complex
and interconnected global operating
environment for businesses. With
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companies looking at a much broader
range of opportunities, often across
a more diverse geography, it is not
surprising to see emerging risks joining
existing concerns. Among these
growing ‘Drivers of Corporate Risk’ are:
Resource Scarcity
Spot shortages of energy, key
metals, food sources, even water
have characterized the decade,
with significant risk implications for
companies trying to balance supply
and demand.
Environmental
Responsibility
Companies are more often being
held accountable for their actions
by an increasingly environmentally
aware public, as well as by rapidly
changing national and multinational
environmental regulations. This risk
is compounded by increased weather
volatility and severity related to
climate change effects.
Geopolitical Security
In an age of numerous regional
conflicts, expanding terrorism and
shifting power centers, we see
increasing impacts on business from
political changes and instability
at both regional and local levels.
Such political risks affect business
operations or investments across many
parts of the world.
Technology
Dependency
The rapid proliferation of digital and
mobile communications has created
numerous choke points that are
susceptible to physical disruption, or,
more and more often, to cyber-attack
by individual hackers or by organized
activist or criminal groups.
Alongside this multiplication of external
risk factors, many companies have
also taken on additional risk through
their continuing drive for increased
efficiency. Widely implemented
business practices such as 'just-in-time'
(‘JIT’) logistics, lean supply chains, and
reduced redundancy in operations may
increase efficiency and lower operating
costs, but they can leave companies
with little margin for disruption or
error. Efficiency without appropriate
attention to risk can potentially create
fragility in operations.
economic volatility, mean that
companies must ask themselves
directly: what sort of crises could we
face? And, if an unexpected event
strikes, how can we prepare ourselves
now to position the company for
recovery and future growth?
Finally, the pace of technological
change (widespread use of the Internet
and mobile communications is less
than 20 years old), along with rapid
globalization and interconnection
among economies makes it more
difficult for traditional risk and crisis
management practices to keep up.
Companies often find themselves
preparing for and responding to the
last crisis, while pushing into new
businesses without establishing the
necessary safeguards against failure.
Risk management, more than ever, is
one of the key strategic disciplines
in this environment. However,
rapidly changing risk profiles and the
proliferation of new and different
kinds of risk, along with unprecedented
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Markets don’t lie: tracking a crisis through
share price
Figure 1. Tracking Company 1 share price following
crisis event
Figure 2. Tracking Company 2 share price following
crisis event
1.20
1.10
1.15
1.00
0.90
1.10
0.80
1.05
0.70
1.00
0.60
0.95
0.50
0.90
15 Jan
15 Feb
15 Mar
15 Apr
Normalized Company 1 Share Price
15 Jun
Normalized S&P 500 Index
The negative effect on a company’s
share price is only one measure of
the impact of a crisis (alongside
reputational and brand impacts, loss of
revenues, fines, impacts on cash flow,
and other repercussions) but this public
and market-driven impact is frequently
the most dramatic.
In Figures 1-3 we have picked a few
simple examples to demonstrate this
often stark effect.
The plots show examples of companies
affected by a crisis event, represented
in time by the red circle. Company 1
faced a crisis following a large and
historically-common form of human
catastrophe; Company 2 was exposed
to a huge and technically-complex
industrial accident; and Company 3
faced a global product recall following
the failure of a key design element
within one of its core products.
The companies are from different
industries, and the specific industrywide index of share values has been
normalized and tracked against the
individual company’s performance. As
is almost always the case, the impact
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15 May
0.40
16 Apr
30 Apr
14 May
Normalized Company 2 Share Price
on share value following a crisis is not
only negative; it is often pronounced
and can persist over a prolonged period,
despite the industry.
Other interesting aspects of these and
similar data sets include:
Multi-stage crisis events
The demonstration of the multi-stage
nature of many crisis events is shown
in the cases of both Company 1 and
Company 2. Here, we can clearly see
two distinct phases of impact, and
in the case of Company 1, its share
value had begun to recover before
falling dramatically away. The reason
in both cases was a re-estimation
by the public of the level of impact
of the crisis and indicated that
company responses were inadequate
in relation to the actual scope of the
issue. Significantly under-estimating
the impact of the crisis may give the
company short-term ‘breathing space’,
but the facts will always surface.
28 May
11 Jun
25 Jun
Normalized Industry Index
Big fish syndrome
This is the subsequent industry-wide
impact following either very-largescale events or events affecting a
predominant player in that sector. In
the case of Company 2, the industry
was similarly affected by the event
before it began to recover, although
the industry recovery took place faster
than the specific company recovery
did. The market capitalizations of
various companies within that same
industry were adversely affected
through no direct fault of their own
strategy or operations.
Figure 3. Tracking Company 3 share price following
crisis event
Figure 4. Tracking Company 4 share price following
crisis event
1.10
1.30
1.25
1.05
1.20
1.15
1.00
1.10
0.95
1.05
1.00
0.90
0.95
0.85
0.90
0.80
1 Feb
0.85
15 Feb
15 Mar
29 Mar
Normalized Company 3 Share Price
09 Apr
12 Apr
26 Apr
Normalized Industry Index
Note: Each figure illustrates the
normalized share price of the company
tracked against the relevant industry
index. In each example, an initial
plateau is reached between the onset of
the crisis and the major share price drop
(between 2 weeks and 1.5 months).
This is the stage during which two
things happen in the public domain;
1) external stakeholders develop
their initial perceptions and reactions
to the severity of the crisis, and 2)
stakeholders form their basic opinion
of the company's responsiveness,
either good or bad. Market analysts
and other third party observers will
ultimately provide additional insights
that will have a bearing on the first
issue, i.e., impact to operations, cash
and the environment. However, public
opinion on the company will be heavily
impacted by those first few weeks and
the initial perception of crisis response.
1 Oct 15 Oct 29 Oct 12 Nov 26 Nov 10 Dec 24 Dec 7 Jan 21 Jan
Normalized Company 4 Share Price
Normalized Industry Index
A good news story…
Companies rarely respond to such
crises with the scope and intensity
that is needed and expected from
stakeholders during such events. We
explore here the essential elements of
high-performance crisis management.
When such approaches are adopted,
the company can develop a capability
to respond positively to negative
events. In the example of Company
4, the externally-visible public
relations plan, including efficient
crisis communications, implied a high
impact 'operational triage' at work
behind the scenes. This company
worked to get their message out early
and structured the communications,
timing and content to help prevent
escalation in the public eye. The
communications were paralleled by
an active operational crisis response
effort to address issues themselves.
Through these integrated efforts, the
company leveraged the opportunity to
defuse the ‘immediate impact’ through
a well thought-out regional strategy to
minimize the depth to which the crisis
was felt.
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Risk Management and Crisis Management
Broadly speaking, risk management
deals with the identification and
assessment of risk exposures of a
company, and the development of
approaches to control those exposures
in order to provide an optimal set
of risk/reward tradeoffs. Strong
crisis management capabilities are
the logical extension of a holistic
risk management approach and
demonstrate to shareholders,
customers, employees and the global
market that management is able to
deal with extreme circumstances and
unexpected negative events.
against the economic effects of
the unexpected event. A strong
demonstration of leadership in
adversity can dramatically improve
investor opinion and protect, or even
improve, the company’s share price.
Crisis events, whether natural or
man-made, almost always have a
negative initial impact on share
value. Paradoxically, however,
such events offer companies an
opportunity for management to
demonstrate their ability to deal with
difficult circumstances. Effective
crisis management can have a more
significant benefit than hedging
Crisis management is one of the logical
elements of risk management planning,
in this case picking up where planned
mitigations have failed. Many crises
stem from problems which pre-date
the proximate cause of the crisis or
emerge as a result of cascading and
compounding events which lead to an
ultimate catastrophic failure.
The only good crisis, of course, is one
that does not happen, either because
the company’s operating procedures
reduce the possibility of adverse events,
or because early and effective response
to a potential crisis solves the problem
without undue harm to its people,
assets, reputation or share price.
The company’s board of directors
and senior management need to
make building the crisis management
capability a high priority, with
appropriate funding, resources
and attention. Ensuring that crisis
management capabilities and planning
are in place should be one of the
expected performance factors for
leadership.
Accenture has identified four essential
elements for helping to achieve high
performance in crisis management.
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1
Prepare for unexpected failures
Crises usually occur because some aspect of risk
management has failed. Crisis management needs to be an
extension of the overall approach to risk management, not
a distinct activity. Integrating both of these activities with
the business is essential. Just as risk management should be
treated as a key business process, inseparable from other
aspects of the business cycle including sales, manufacturing,
and distribution, so is the case with high performance crisis
management.
First steps to
high performance
Conduct robust scenario
planning
Every crisis is different, and it is
impossible to anticipate exactly where,
when and how one or more adverse
events might turn into a full blown
crisis. However, through a combination
of scenario planning and risk exposure
analysis, it is possible to better
prepare for various types of events by
challenging assumptions and highlighting
both the range of possibilities and
potential capability gaps (or strengths) in
dealing with them.
While scenario planning is a fairly
well-developed discipline in some
industries – including chemicals,
energy, and transportation – such
planning does not always integrate
valuable risk exposure identification
and driver analysis coming from other
internal processes. By bringing risk
root cause/driver analysis from other
risk processes into scenario planning,
an additional dimension of potential
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vulnerability is introduced, which helps
focus attention on potential ‘white
space’ (unaddressed gaps) in processes
which can allow event escalation. This
dual approach can help establish a
robust set of considerations for use in
building resilience to crisis events. The
goals of these initial steps are to:
1) challenge current planning
assumptions about what ‘might’
happen to test robustness against
what ‘could’ happen;
2) proactively identify types of
capabilities and processes that could
prevent or mitigate crisis situations;
and
3) create a seamless interaction
between normal risk management
practices and crisis management,
increasing awareness of developing
situations and response effectiveness.
The path to best-in-class
Leverage analytics to drive
prediction
Use predictive analytics
as a decision support tool
to drive a forward-looking
analysis of scenarios, response
effectiveness, and critical
correlations that can complicate
or escalate events. Better
understanding of the drivers
of extreme events, whether
external developments or
internal process interactions,
can help build a robust, flexible
and dynamic crisis management
program. The objective for
enhanced analytics is not to
predict events, but to help
companies develop more
meaningful warning indicators,
and an increased awareness of
their leverage in preventing or
managing 'runaway' crises.
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Ensure that crisis management operates across structures,
functions and divisions, both vertical and horizontal
The crisis does not care how the company is structured. In
any real crisis situation, problems quickly leave organizational
confines and become the concern of the entire company.
Crisis management, therefore, must be established in such
a way as to be effective across different operations and
functions.
First steps to
high performance
Prepare crisis management
structures and plans
While crisis management has a number
of major elements, it takes two main
dimensions: internal and external.
Internal crisis plans should focus
on operational elements and should
determine who needs to do what
in a crisis situation both to protect
and maintain operations, as well as
prevent escalation. Responsibilities
should be clear, with senior executive
oversight as appropriate. Often the
‘traditional’ crisis management plan
takes the form of a thick folder,
gathering dust on senior executives'
shelves and providing little business
support. What is required is primarily a
business exercise, not a risk one, which
will subsequently allow anyone in
management or on the board to know
immediately their own role and the
roles of others during a crisis.
While it is inevitable that some form
of key documentation will be required,
it is the process of developing this
which should be the first step of
embedding crisis management in all
layers of the company. This process
will prompt numerous questions about
roles and responsibilities, helping make
the approach more business-focused,
practical and appropriate for real-world
situations. It will then become easier
for subsequent actions to become
hardwired into business processes and
management decisions, making the
crisis management plan operational
throughout the company.
The external crisis plan focuses on
communications and information
flow, with particular attention to the
public, investors, media, regulators
and government authorities at all
levels. The plan should reach broader
audiences such as employees and
customers, as well. There is a need
to make a distinction between the
target audiences (e.g. public, investors,
regulators) and the mechanism groups
(e.g. media). There is a message
component and a method component.
The path to best-in-class
Develop the long term vision
Map out a master plan to
develop fully integrated crisis
management capabilities which
are embedded in operations,
codified in business processes,
founded in risk management
planning, and executed via
real-time systems. A coherent
and phased roadmap to this
crisis management end state
will enable increased capabilities
while supporting maximum
protection available at any given
stage of development.
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3
Recognize the crisis as early as possible, and take
quick, decisive action
There are numerous examples of crises that could have been
headed off if identified and acted upon earlier. While there
may be operational penalties for inaction or late action,
there are even more significant reputational consequences
from being seen as hesitant or indecisive. The company
should start positioning itself for response, recovery and
growth as soon as the crisis is identified.
First steps to
high performance
Develop the ‘A-team’ for crisis
management
Reacting quickly is hard. But
early recognition is one of the key
determinants of effective crisis
management. Ensuring a close interlock
with the risk and operational indicators
within the business is an effective
method of achieving this. Identification
of potential crisis situations must be
thoroughly incorporated into scenario
planning and ultimately into operational
processes.
In a crisis environment, events
often move too quickly to allow for
exhaustive review and multiple levels
of approval. One of the major factors
in effective crisis management can
be the prior development of a small,
centralized team with communications
access to key executives, department
heads and board members ('A-team').
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This central ‘A-team’ should be
thoroughly prepared for dealing with
a range of crisis situations and should
have ownership of both the internal
and external aspects of the crisis
management plan. Contact information
for operational, legal, financial and
regulatory resources should be
incorporated into the plan. Back-up or
alternate resources for team members
should also be identified and briefed
as part of the plan, and one (or more)
board members should be part of the
process of developing this ‘A-team’.
The team will also be responsible for
leading the exercises and testing of the
existing crisis management planning.
The exercises should take the learnings
back through the processes to ensure
that with each refinement, the
company is increasing its capability.
The path to best-in-class
Get the best out of your
‘Golden Hour’
In emergency medicine, the
‘Golden Hour’ refers to a period
of time following a person’s
traumatic injury, during which
there is the highest likelihood
that quick medical treatment will
prevent death. Tie your response
planning to a ‘Golden Hour’
should unforeseen scenarios
strike. Your actions in this initial
window often determine how
your efforts are later judged
by the public – plan well ahead
what your first steps might be.
4
Communicate thoroughly, effectively and
frequently with all audiences
Company management cannot prepare for every conceivable
crisis. They can, however, prepare a communications
framework that will facilitate rapid communication and
rapid response to changing events.
First steps to
high performance
Integrate real time
communication and analysis to
align management perceptions
and commentary
Organizations should ensure that
those who may have to speak to the
media are thoroughly trained in how to
handle tough questions both in formal
media and 'off the record', convey
key messages and avoid embarrassing
sound bites. Additionally, in this age of
continuous recording and video (e.g.,
cell phones) it is critical that company
staff learn how to talk about crisis
events no matter where they are, or
with whom they are speaking. The
concept of 'always on' communication
is truly the norm today and staff
need to be prepared to manage this
new reality.
In a 24/7 media environment, a
company's performance in the media
arena is carefully evaluated and
becomes an important element in
how audiences judge overall crisis
response. In a crisis situation, the
perception of the way the company is
handling the crisis becomes reality as
experienced by external stakeholders
including media, government
officials, customers, employees and
shareholders. Crisis management
can be said to deal with the reality,
while crisis communications manages
the perceptions so that they are
consistent with the true situation of
the company. Both crisis management
and crisis communications, however,
play an important role in determining
if and when the company regains lost
shareholder value.
Mechanisms to increase alignment
might include internal (encrypted)
text alerts to inform management
on messaging changes and dedicated
communications coaching staff to
provide ongoing support to multiple
leaders, versus point in time advice.
These can help support the critical goal
of ensuring that messages are both
comprehensive and factually correct;
because public statements based
on incomplete knowledge can soon
negatively affect the public image of
the company.
The path to best-in-class
Prepare your people to a
greater depth
Ensure all leadership is trained
in speaking with media and the
public in general; understands
clearly who is authorized to
speak for the company and what
the messages are; is directly
supported by public affairs and
legal; and regularly participates
in filmed communications
practice exercises. Effective
communication is the result of
planning and practice.
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Preparing for the future
Crisis management is a core business
process, not a one-time event. Crisis
planning should evolve with the
organization’s own strategy, focus and
people. Once a crisis occurs, however,
the organization should be ready to
act on two levels: first, to contain and
control the immediate damage; and,
even while this is taking place, to begin
the process of recovery and growth.
Protecting the employees,
shareholders, and the public is at the
heart of good risk management. High
performance crisis management helps
to make sure that when events begin
to move beyond your initial plans and
efforts, there is a credible backstop to
rely on. It prepares the company for
future growth even at the worst of
times.
Crisis management is also a logical
extension of a well-formed and
comprehensive enterprise level risk
management program. As noted
earlier, crisis management picks up
where the previously developed risk
mitigations have failed, and should
therefore not operate as a silo or
stand alone process. Additionally,
when crisis management planning is
coordinated with other enterprise level
risk efforts there is a much greater
likelihood that the ‘white space’
between organizational structures and
business processes will be identified
and managed.
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What Accenture can bring
This publication outlines four
essential elements which a company
should adopt on its journey to high
performance crisis management.
From successfully preparing for the
unexpected, through to ensuring
a robust crisis communications
approach, implementing these
elements (and sub-components)
will not only help reduce the
immediate impacts of crisis events,
but will help position the company
to rapidly recover and benefit from
the event, leveraging the situation
for future growth and competitive
differentiation.
At Accenture we know, from
examples across our global business,
that integrating crisis management
within a consistent and complete
risk management framework can
lead to high performance. In working
with clients, and drawing from deep
industry insight, our experience
indicates that adopting these practical
elements can yield measurable rewards
for the company.
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Accenture can help businesses on their
journey to high performance through
crisis management. We can be with
you anywhere on the continuum of risk
and crisis management models. We
can offer a team of people with deep
global and industry experience—people
who are pragmatic in their approach.
People who can provide insight and
guidance on how to put strategy
and risk management together for a
company—and make it work. We know
how to help you use these elements for
all they’re worth—and assist in moving
you closer to becoming that highperformance business you want to be.
If you’d like to find out how we can
help do that in your company, please
contact us.
“I have always found that plans
are useless. But planning is
indispensable.”
Dwight D. Eisenhower
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About the Authors
Steve Culp
Steve is the managing director –
Accenture Risk Management. Based in
London, Steve has 20 years of global
experience in strategy definition, risk
management, enterprise performance
management and delivering large
scale finance operations engagements.
Prior to his current role, Steve was the
global lead for Accenture’s Finance &
Performance Management consulting
services for global banking, insurance
and capital markets institutions. With
his extensive risk management and
performance management experience
and business acumen, Steve guides
executives and their teams on
the journey to becoming highperformance businesses.
Craig Faris
Craig is executive director – Risk
Management, Resources area. Based
in Washington, D.C., Craig brings
over 25 years of global, corporate
and consulting risk and strategy
experience across a broad spectrum
of industries including energy, utilities,
retail and consumer products. He has
extensive experience in all aspects of
risk governance, process design and
management, analytics, reporting
and integration of key business
processes. His pragmatic experience
in crisis management stems from his
consultancy assignments where he
advises companies on crisis issues
and applications and as a former
member of a crisis response team
with both a major oil company and
large global retailer.
Nick Pope
Nick is a senior manager, Risk
Management. Based in London, Nick
has over 10 years of experience
in risk consulting, developing risk
solutions for a variety of crossindustry clients. His blend of
technical and strategic expertise
allows a holistic understanding of
the key risk challenges across the
global environment. Nick’s focus is
on the integration of risk and crisis
management with business strategy.
His work is based on designing and
implementing solutions that help
executives maximize organizational
value by continuously evaluating
business strategy with risk. This
includes proactive development of
countermeasures for dealing with
risks that constantly threaten the
achievement of enterprise strategic
objectives.
Copyright © 2011 Accenture
All rights reserved.
About Accenture Management
Consulting
About Accenture
Accenture, its logo, and
High Performance Delivered
are trademarks of Accenture.
Accenture is a leading provider of
management consulting services
worldwide. Drawing on the extensive
experience of its 13,000 management
consultants globally, Accenture
Management Consulting helps clients
move from issue to outcome, with
pace, certainty and strategic agility. We
enable companies and governments to
achieve high performance by combining
broad and deep industry and functional
offerings and capabilities across seven
service lines: Customer Relationship
Management, Finance & Performance
Management, Process & Innovation
Performance, Risk Management, Talent
& Organization Performance, Strategy,
and Supply Chain Management.
We would like to thank Craig Murray,
Himanshu Patney and Ron Brown for
their contributions to this publication.
About Accenture Risk
Management
ACC11-0462 / 11-2809
Accenture Risk Management consulting
services work with clients to create and
implement integrated risk management
capabilities designed to gain higher
economic returns, improve shareholder
value and increase stakeholder
confidence.
Accenture is a global management
consulting, technology services
and outsourcing company, with
more than 215,000 people serving
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Combining unparalleled experience,
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industries and business functions,
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Accenture collaborates with clients to
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ended Aug. 31, 2010. Its home page is
www.accenture.com.

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